Dr. Reisman's important book exposes in detail the fraudulent and criminal sex "research" conducted by Indiana University zoologist Alfred C. Kinsey. Kinsey's publication of Sexual Behavior in the Human Male in 1948 made him the undisputed authority on human sexuality. Sexual Behavior in the Human Female followed in 1953, and the supposedly "scientific" material in these two volumes earned Kinsey the title "father of the American sexual revolution."

Crimes and Consequences is the culmination of 30 years of research by Dr. Reisman. She documents how Kinsey collected data on "child sexuality" from what he called "scientific observers" who were actually pedophiles. More than 2,000 children (some of them infants) were victims of sexual experimentation in absolute secrecy, and Reisman shows how "this deception was carefully nurtured and maintained by the Kinsey Institute, Indiana University, the National Research Council, and the Rockefeller Foundation."

The book also exposes the fraud in Kinsey's research involving adults. Most of his adult subjects were prison inmates and sex offenders. When normal interviewees denied engaging in deviant sexual acts, the "researchers" either disregarded the data or only recorded answers that they determined were "truthful."

While Dr. Reisman's revelations about the child molestation by the Kinsey Institute are shocking, the widespread consequences of Kinsey's "research" are just as disturbing. His "far-reaching legal legacy" includes the altering of America's sex crime and obscenity laws, which opened the door to attacks on traditional marriage and morality.

Kinsey's "findings" have been proven bogus by honest research, but they are nonetheless the basis for nearly all sex and AIDS education programs in the schools. Reisman shows how a myriad of social ills, including sex crimes, sexually transmitted diseases, illegitimacy, psychological disorders, divorce, and suicide have resulted from Kinsey's crimes.